For hundreds of years, this gaseous giant planet appeared shrouded in colorful bands of clouds extending from dusk to dawn, referred to as zones and belts. Story: https://www.nasa.gov/feature/jpl/nasa-juno-findings-jupiter-s-jet-streams-are-unearthly
The bands were thought to be an expression of Jovian weather, related to winds blowing eastward and westward at different speeds.
This animation illustrates a recent discovery by Juno that demonstrates these east-west flows, also known as jet-streams penetrate deep into the planet's atmosphere, to a depth of about 1,900 miles (3,000 kilometers). Due to Jupiter's rapid rotation (Jupiter's day is about 10 hours), these flows extend into the interior parallel to Jupiter's axis of rotation, in the form of nested cylinders. Below this layer the flows decay, possibly slowed by Jupiter's strong magnetic field.
The depth of these flows surprised scientists who estimate the total mass involved in these jet streams to be about 1% of Jupiter's mass (Jupiter's mass is over 300 times that of Earth). This discovery was revealed by the unprecedented accuracy of Juno's measurements of the gravity field.
Credit: NASA/JPL-Caltech/SwRI/ASI

Jupiter Internal Structure and the First Juno Results

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Yamila Miguel
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Abstract:
The key to understand our origins is in the interiors and atmospheres of the giant planets. Jupiter is the biggest planet in our system and the most influential one: its large mass shaped the architecture of the solar system and due to its fast formation it contains valuable information of the solar system formation history. In orbit since July 2016, the first orbits of the Juno mission have led to a remarkable improvement of the planet gravity data, changing our knowledge of the planetary interior and leading to a much better comprehension of the giant planet and its role in the solar system. In this seminar, I will present the new Juno results, the models we use to understand Jupiter's interior and its differential rotation, and the main challenges and questions that remained to be solved.

OTD in Space – March 4: Jupiter's Rings Discovered

On March 4, 1979, NASA’s Voyager 1 spacecraft took the first photos of rings around Jupiter. This was the first time anyone had seen Jupiter’s rings. Because the rings are so thin and faint, it's extremely difficult to see them from Earth with ground-based telescopes. Even for a spacecraft out near Jupiter, the rings essentially invisible unless the cameras look at them edge-on or from an angle where sunlight shines directly through them. Since Voyager 1 first saw the rings, other space missions like Juno and Galileo have continued to study them. Scientists believe that the rings formed by comets colliding with Jupiter's moons and kicking dust into the planet's orbit.

Jupiter's Red Spot Is Vanishing - This Week In Science

Jupiter's Great Red Spot is vanishing and SpaceX put a red Tesla Roadster into space. Here's what you missed on This Week in Science.
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Jupiter's Great Red Spot May Fade Away In The Next Ten Or Twenty Years

According to a report by Business Insider, Jupiter's Great Red Spot, as we know it today, is shrinking and there's a chance that it may only 10 to 20 years left before it fades away completely. The super-storm is wider than Earth and has been churning around for potentially four hundred years. According to the report, Glenn Orton, a lead Juno mission team member and planetary scientist at NASA JPL, said, "In truth, the GRS has been shrinking for a long time." He reportedly went on to say, "Nothing lasts forever."
http://www.businessinsider.com/how-long-jupiter-great-red-spot-will-last-2018-2
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See Jupiter Looking Downright Gorgeous In These New NASA Photos Taken From Juno Spacecraft | TIME

NASA has shared brand new photos of Jupiter taken by the Juno spacecraft, showing the gas giant’s blue-tinged skies. The Juno spacecraft takes batches of photos about every 53 days as it orbits Jupiter. NASA researchers uploaded the raw images online last month, prompting several people to process the photos into colorful views of Jupiter, including self-described citizen scientists Gerald Eichstädt and Seán Doran.
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OTD in Space – January 7: Galileo Discovers 3 Moons of Jupiter

On January 7, 1610, the Italian astronomer Galileo discovered three of Jupiter's moons: Callisto, Europa and Io. When he looked at Jupiter through his telescope, he saw what he thought were three tiny stars in the background, and he sketched their locations. The next day, he looked again and saw the three stars were not where he thought they'd be. Instead of being "fixed" in the background like other stars, they moved along with the planet, and Galileo realized that Jupiter had moons. Besides Earth's moon, these were the first natural satellites anyone had ever seen in the solar system.

NASA Spacecraft Captured This 'Mind-Bending' Image Of Jupiter

NASA on Thursday shared a "mind-bending" image of Jupiter that was captured by Juno in December.

Juno

NASA’s Juno mission began orbiting Jupiter on July 4 of last year. Since that time, the solar-powered spacecraft has performed eight science passes of the solar system’s biggest planetary body, representing a quarter of its planned primary mission. This video will include Juno’s latest findings on its iconic Great Red Spot, radiation fields and atmospheric dynamics.

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Episode 20/98
*Juno probes the depths of Jupiter's Great Red Spot
Data collected by NASA's Juno spacecraft during its first pass over Jupiter's Great Red Spot in July indicate that this iconic feature penetrates well below the clouds. Other revelations from the mission include that Jupiter has two previously uncharted radiation zones.
*Life discovered living on just thin air
Scientists have discovered microbes that literally live on thin air. 01The findings have implications for the search for life on other planets, suggesting extra-terrestrial microbes could also rely on trace atmospheric gases for survival.
*Claims that Mars does have a protective magnetosphere after all
A new study claims the Martian atmosphere is well protected from the effects of the solar wind despite the absence of a global Earth-like magnetic field. While Mars now lacks Earth’s geodynamo driven magnetic field, the Sun’s solar wind instead induces currents in the ionized upper Martian atmosphere -- creating an induced magnetosphere.
*Sceptics guide to Christmas
Eran Segev joins us to look at the real origins of Christmas
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Climate patterns and storms on Jupiter can have striking similarities to those on Earth. One such pattern is a four-year temperature cycle in the Jovian upper atmosphere called the QQO. This cycle has a little sibling in Earth's stratosphere that can influence the transport of aerosols and the formation of hurricanes, making it an active area of climate research. Now, scientists at NASA's Goddard Space Flight Center have developed a new model for understanding Jupiter's QQO, and it could lead to a better climate model for Earth.
Credit: NASA GODDARD
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Jupiter's QQO

Climate patterns and storms on Jupiter can have striking similarities to those on Earth. One such pattern is a four-year temperature cycle in the Jovian upper atmosphere called the QQO. This cycle has a little sibling in Earth's stratosphere that can influence the transport of aerosols and the formation of hurricanes, making it an active area of climate research. Now, scientists at NASA's Goddard Space Flight Center have developed a new model for understanding Jupiter's QQO, and it could lead to a better climate model for Earth.

Incredible NASA Simulated Flight Through Jupiter's Great Red Spot

The most famous storm in the solar system is also one of the largest: Jupiter's Great Red Spot. The storm is just a blemish on Jupiter, but if you compare it to the size of Earth — this storm could swallow our entire planet whole. In July, NASA Juno spacecraft flew over the spot and NASA then used that data to produce a simulated flight through the Great Red Spot. Following is a transcript of the video.
NASA's Juno spacecraft is orbiting Jupiter. Recently, it flew over Jupiter's famous Great Red Spot. The Great Red Spot is a giant storm 1.3X the size of Earth that's been raging for hundreds of years. As Juno flew over the swirling vortex, it measured the storm's temperature and depth.
NASA then used Juno's data to produce this simulation of what it would be like to fly into this massive storm. The storm is 50 to 100X deeper than Earth's oceans. As you dive deeper into the atmosphere the temperature increases.
"The warmth of the spot's base explains the ferocious winds we see at the top of the atmosphere," said Andy Ingersoll, Juno co-investigator in a NASA statement.
Wind speeds are greater than Earth's most powerful hurricanes. So, it's best that Juno keep its distance and simply enjoy the view from afar.
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Fly into the Great Red Spot of Jupiter with NASA’s Juno Mission

This animation takes the viewer on a simulated flight into, and then out of, Jupiter’s upper atmosphere at the location of the Great Red Spot. It was created by combining an image from the JunoCam imager on NASA's Juno spacecraft with a computer-generated animation.
The perspective begins about 2,000 miles (3,000 kilometers) above the cloud tops of the planet's southern hemisphere. The bar at far left indicates altitude during the quick descent; a second gauge next to that depicts the dramatic increase in temperature that occurs as the perspective dives deeper down. The clouds turn crimson as the perspective passes through the Great Red Spot. Finally, the view ascends out of the spot.
For more, visit https://www.nasa.gov/feature/jpl/nasas-juno-probes-the-depths-of-jupiters-great-red-spot

On Earth, people at very high latitudes sometimes enjoy the spectacular light shows known as the auroras, also called the northern or southern lights. Our planet is not, however, the only world to experience auroras. For some time, scientists have observed high-energy auroras on Jupiter in the form of ultraviolet and X-ray light. A new study using data from NASA’s Chandra X-ray Observatory and ESA’s XMM-Newton shows that the auroras on Jupiter are significantly different than those on Earth. Scientists have discovered that Jupiter’s auroras behave independently of one another at each pole. This is unlike Earth, where the northern and southern lights tend to mirror one another.
To understand how Jupiter produces its X-ray auroras, researchers plan to combine new and upcoming X-ray data from Chandra and XMM-Newton with information from NASA’s Juno mission, which is currently in orbit around the planet. If scientists can connect the X-ray activity with physical changes observed simultaneously with Juno, they may be able to determine the process that generates the Jovian auroras.
There are many questions this new X-ray study pose: how does Jupiter’s magnetic field give particles the huge energies needed to make X-rays? Do these high-energy particles affect the Jovian weather and the chemical composition of its atmosphere? Can they explain the unusually high temperatures found in certain places in Jupiter’s atmosphere? These are the questions that Chandra, XMM-Newton, and Juno may be able to help answer in the future.

Jupiter's Auroras 'Behaving Mysteriously' Says NASA

The northern and southern lights at each of the gas giant's poles "act independently of one another," according to NASA. This is not the case with Earth.
Credit: NASA/CXC

A Quick Look at Jupiter's Auroras

A new study reveals the auroras -- a.k.a. the northern or southern lights – on Jupiter behave mysteriously.
X-ray observations from NASA’s Chandra X-ray Observatory and ESA’s XMM-Newton showed something surprising.
Unlike on Earth, the auroras on Jupiter at each pole act independently of one another.
This is causing scientists to revisit their ideas for how Jupiter’s auroras are generated.
In the future, scientists plan to combine data from Chandra, XMM-Newton, and the Juno spacecraft, which is currently orbiting Jupiter.
They hope this reveals the source of this high-energy light show on the fifth planet from our Sun.

The Mystery Behind Jupiter's Powerful Auroras

Jupiter has the most powerful auroras in our solar system. However, when scientists looked closer, they didn't find what they expected.
These Satellite Dishes Can See Electrons 100 km Away - https://youtu.be/OnlYZdRZ_pw
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Jupiter's Auroras Present a Powerful Mystery
https://www.jpl.nasa.gov/news/news.php?release=2017-236
"Scientists on NASA's Juno mission have observed massive amounts of energy swirling over Jupiter's polar regions that contribute to the giant planet's powerful auroras - only not in ways the researchers expected."
Wild Stratospheric Balloon Ride Shows No Link Between Auroras and Radiation Flux
https://www.seeker.com/space/exploration/wild-stratospheric-balloon-ride-shows-no-link-between-auroras-and-radiation-flux
"An incredible flight in March 2017 set out to see if there is any correlation between auroras over Fairbanks, Alaska, and radiation flux in the stratosphere. While the team behind the autonomous stratospheric balloon ride couldn't establish a link, they came away from the experience with plenty of stories to tell - a lost balloon, an airplane search, and a six-mile, one-way hike to rescue their data."
NASA Captures 'Spectacular' Views of Auroras on Uranus
https://www.seeker.com/space/planets/nasa-captures-spectacular-views-of-auroras-on-uranus
"Bright auroras light up the planet's atmosphere in two newly released photos, which combine observations by NASA's Hubble Space Telescope and the agency's Voyager 2 probe. (Voyager 2 flew by Uranus in 1986 as part of a "grand tour" of the solar system's outer planets that the spacecraft performed with its twin, Voyager 1.)"
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Based on new research, scientists have observed something unusual about Jupiter's X-ray auroras.

Jupiter's Secrets - Exploring the Planet's Mysteries

Have you ever wondered what lies deep beneath the mysteries of a planet like Jupiter? Its evolution tells us a lot about its secrets and offers insight into its mysteries.
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Climate on Jupiter - The Great Red Spot and Other Phenomenons

Jupiter's climate is extraordinary - phenomenons like the Great Red Spot just appear on this planet. But that's just one thing that's making Jupiter exceptional.
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Juno flies over Jupiter

This sequence of color-enhanced images shows how quickly the viewing geometry changes for NASA’s Juno spacecraft as it swoops by Jupiter. The images were obtained by JunoCam.
Once every 53 days, Juno swings close to Jupiter, speeding over its clouds. In just two hours, the spacecraft travels from a perch over Jupiter’s north pole through its closest approach (perijove), then passes over the south pole on its way back out. This sequence shows 11 color-enhanced images from Perijove 8 (Sept. 1, 2017) with the south pole on the left (11th image in the sequence) and the north pole on the right (first image in the sequence).
The first image on the right shows a half-lit globe of Jupiter, with the north pole approximately at the upper center of the image close to the terminator -- the dividing line between night and day. As the spacecraft gets closer to Jupiter, the horizon moves in and the range of visible latitudes shrinks. The second and third images in this sequence show the north polar region rotating away from the spacecraft's field of view while the first of Jupiter's lighter-colored bands comes into view. The fourth through the eighth images display a blue-colored vortex in the mid-southern latitudes near Points of Interest "Collision of Colours," "Sharp Edge," "Caltech, by Halka," and "Structure01." The Points of Interest are locations in Jupiter’s atmosphere that were identified and named by members of the general public. Additionally, a darker, dynamic band can be seen just south of the vortex. In the ninth and tenth images, the south polar region rotates into view. The final image on the left displays Jupiter's south pole in the center.
From the start of this sequence of images to the end, roughly 1 hour and 35 minutes elapsed.

Space News - Jupiter's Mystery Aurora

Juno continues to gather data at Jupiter, and early results are delivering a mystery to us about Jupiter's aurora.
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Where did water come from in the universe? Research points to Jupiter or Saturn - TomoNews

BORDEAUX, FRANCE — A study published in the journal Icarus, suggest that Earth's water is a "simple byproduct" of giant planet growth.
During the formation of gas giants such as Saturn or Jupiter, they enter a period of rapid growth. This destabilized nearby water-rich space rocks known as planetesimals[e], bringing them into the planetary orbit.
Next, the gravity there would have propelled these to the inner or outer solar system.
The researchers speculate some were sent in an inward direction, toward some early form of Earth and seeded it with water.
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A Mysterious Power Source Fuels Jupiter Auroras

Astronomers are providing more insight into Jupiter's mysterious auroras.

Astronomers find origin of Jupiter's auroras

This finding adds to our understanding of how other planets interact with their surrounding environment in space.
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This is a clip I created a little over a year ago.. just found it in the archive and decided to release it, cause why not? It's about 2-3 hours of tracking Jupiter and it's moons on the Nexstar8 and Sony a6000. I didn't note it in the video, but I have it playing 3 times in a row, each at different speeds. Rock out!

Voyager 2 Flies by Jupiter

Excerpt on Jupiter from "The Grand Tour."
For more about the Voyager mission, visit https://voyager.jpl.nasa.gov/

NASA released images taken by the JunoCam that show Jupiter's Great Red Spot. NASA says the images represent the first close-up view of the iconic red storm that swirls above Jupiter. (July 13)
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NASA's best images of Jupiter's Great Red Spot

NASA's Juno spacecraft sent back its closest images yet of Jupiter's Great Red Spot.
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Jupiter's Great Red Spot seen by Juno

During its 10 July flyby, NASA's Juno spacecraft took images of Jupiter's Great Red Spot. Measuring 16,350 kilometers (10,159 miles) in width, Jupiter's Great Red Spot is 1.3 times as wide as Earth. The storm has possibly existed for more than 350 years, but recently the Great Red Spot appears to be shrinking.
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NASA snaps super close-ups of Jupiter's Great Red Spot

The photos are in, and they are out of this world.
NASA scientists and space junkies on Wednesday got a front-row-seat look at Jupiter's Giant Red Spot, a mysterious area that has mesmerized stargazers for hundreds of years.
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Neil deGrasse Tyson brilliantly explains Jupiter's Red Spot

Subscribe now to ScienceNET!
Astrophysicist Neil deGrasse Tyson shows us how and why Jupiter's Red Spot can rage on for over 300 years with ease.

What We Don’t Know About Europa

Revisit a classic: Robert Pappalardo (Jet Propulsion Laboratory) presented a talk "What We Don’t Know About Europa" during the November 19, 2009 symposium at the Keck Institute for Space Studies - Challenging the Paradigm: The Legacy of Galileo.

What has NASA's Juno discovered around Jupiter so far?

It's been one year since NASA's Juno spacecraft arrived at Jupiter. What has it seen? What has it discovered? Actually, quite a lot!
I showcase some of the most amazing photos you will see of Jupiter, as well as discuss it's magnetic field, core, bands, aurora, atmosphere, storms and clouds.
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Image credits: NASA, JPL, Hubble, Björn Jónsson, Gerald Eichstädt, Seán Doran
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This week, the first science results from the Juno spacecraft around Jupiter are in; the LIGO collaboration has discovered its third gravitational wave event; astronomers warn that flares from red dwarf stars may threaten any life on exoplanets in orbit around them; and NASA’s next big space observatory, the WFIRST mission, is facing a funding crisis.
Links to this week's stories:
Juno First Results:
This week, the first science results from the Juno spacecraft around Jupiter are in; the LIGO collaboration has discovered its third gravitational wave event; astronomers warn that flares from red dwarf stars may threaten any life on exoplanets in orbit around them; and NASA’s next big space observatory, the WFIRST mission, is facing a funding crisis.
LIGO Finds Third Black Hole Merger via Gravitational Waves:
https://www.ligo.caltech.edu/news/ligo20170601
Red Dwarf Flares not good for life:
https://www.jpl.nasa.gov/news/news.php?release=2017-161
NASA's WFIRST Gets a Financial Review:
https://www.nature.com/articles/n-12339962?WT.mc_id=TWT_NatureNews&sf86108167=1
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The Expanse: Ganymede Station & The Galilean Moons

Spacedock returns to The Expanse after a short break to take a look at the moons of Jupiter as they exist in the 23rd Century.
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NASA just released the first inside-look of Jupiter's rings

NASA's Juno spacecraft has been orbiting Jupiter since July, 2016. But only just recently have scientists had a chance to analyze all of its data — and the results are painting a different picture of Jupiter than what anyone expected.
Juno is also returning images unlike any we've ever seen, including of Jupiter's ring system. Jupiter's rings may not be as pronounced as Saturn's, but its ring system still extends to an impressive 140,000 miles away from the giant gas planet. This video shows the first inside peak of Jupiter's rings — Juno snapped it when it was between the planet and the ring system.
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Amazing pictures of Jupiter from Juno

Images of swirling cyclones over Jupiter's poles have taken scientists by surprise. Read more: http://ow.ly/QJXJ30c4fZO

Oval Storms Dot Jupiter's Landscape In Stunning NASA Image

Check out this stunning enhanced color view of Jupiter released by NASA on Friday.

The Hubble Space Telescope observed Jupiter on April 3rd, 2017 - just days before Jupiter is in opposition on April 7th. This new image of Jupiter is part of Hubble's Outer Planets Atmospheres Legacy program, which is one of many ways Hubble provides science on the Jupiter system.
Credit: NASA’s Goddard Space Flight Center/Katrina Jackson
Music credit: "Triangulate" by Gianluigi Gallo [PRS]; El Murmullo Sarao SGAE, Universal Sarao SGAE; SaraoMusic; Killer Tracks Production Music
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Watch the talented Reggie Watts perform at the Exploratorium August 9th, 2012. Reggie was at the Exploratorium for an Osher Fellowship, and he graciously joined us at the end of a live webcast on Mars to share a little of his own feelings about the red planet!

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